Linear permanent magnet motor driven downhole plunger pumping unit

ABSTRACT

This invention concerns oil production, particularly, units fitted with linear downhole motor driven displacement pumps and may be used for production of stratum fluids from marginal well stock at large depths. This increases reliability and improves power performance of the unit including a fully integrated plunger pump fitted with discharge valves and gravity gas separator with non- return valve skid above fitted with a coupling for fastening the oil-well pumping unit to flow tubing, the downhole linear motor mounted below the plunger pump, slider upstroke damper, slider down-stroke damper as well as telemetry unit mounted below the linear motor with measuring transducers connected to temperature sensors fitted in the linear motor and linked to a ground- based control unit through a neutral wire of linear motor windings; the ground-based control unit is designed as a three-phase high-frequency inverting controller and output transformer connected to the downhole linear motor through insulated three-wire cable.

FIELD OF INVENTION

This disclosure relates in general to well pumps and in particular to a reciprocating well pump operated by a downhole electrical motor.

BACKGROUND

A reciprocating well pump downhole motor (US20150176574) which includes the downhole plunger pump consisting of a fixed barrel and a moving plunger has been proposed. The downhole motor is mounted below the pump and connected with the plunger and causes the plunger to reciprocate. A valve arrangement mounted slightly below the plunger allows the oil-well fluid to flow into the barrel during the upstroke and into the chamber of the oil-well pump below the plunger during its down stroke.

It has previously been proposed to use an oil pumping unit (U.S. Pat. No. 7,316,270) driven by a linear synchronous three-phase motor with rare earth permanent magnets including a motor with the mover reciprocating when the motor is connected to the power mains, and a pump, which has a barrel with suction ducts for oil-well fluid passage and a valve, a movable valve and a piston, a bottom intake valve inside arranged in such a manner that when the mover is reciprocating, the oil-well fluid is being transferred in one direction.

It has previously been proposed to use a pumping unit (RU 2522347 C2) consisting of a downhole part which includes a pump and a linear permanent magnet downhole motor comprising the fixed part (stator) with the winding and the moving part inside (mover) designed so as to allow the mover to reciprocate with regard to stator, the motor housing is linked to the pump case, the mover is linked to the moving part of the pump, the control electronic unit with its power output connected to the stator winding the control electronic unit comprises the ground-based and downhole units, the motor is fitted with the mover position sensor, the downhole telemetry unit is designed as an inverter in a tight enclosure with standard atmospheric pressure inside, the inverter enclosure is linked to the motor housing, the inverter output is connected to the power circuit and winding through cable glands, the output of position sensor elements is connected to the inverter control unit through additional cable glands and the ground-based unit is designed as series-connected input rectifier, single-phase high-frequency inverting controller and output rectifier.

The unit is characterized'in that the high-frequency inverting controller may be designed for galvanic isolation between the output and input rectifier; the first pole of the ground-base unit power output may be connected to the first pole of the downhole inverter power circuit through an insulated cable; the second poles of the ground-based unit output and inverter power circuit are connected with the electrically coupled structural elements of the unit; the analogous poles of the ground-based unit output and downhole inverter power circuit may be connected through insulated two-wire cable; and the inverter control unit may comprise the mover step counter and be designed for reverse operation when the mover reaches the specified number of steps.

The drawback of this unit is a relatively poor reliability.

It has previously been proposed to use a downhole pumping unit (RU 2535288, C2) comprising the linear motor which includes the housing with the concentrically arranged fixed tight stator and a mover inside, the motor cavity formed by the stator, housing and mover is filled with the fluid and the mover is supported by the stator bearing members to provide for reciprocation along the stator longitudinal axis and a pump with the actuator linked to the mover and the fixed part is linked to the motor housing through structural elements designed for venting of the formed pump cavity as well as end plates between pump and motor cavities, arrangements for trapping mechanical impurities within the motor cavity and fine filters located axially in the motor housing between the stator and end plates with their exterior face tightly connected to the housing and the interior face contacts with the mover surface through arrangements for trapping mechanical impurities within the motor cavity.

This unit also lacks proper reliability.

A diaphragm pump downhole linear motor (CN101220806 A1 has been also proposed. The downhole linear motor is attached to the diaphragm pump by hydraulic transmission. The invention is characterized in that it comprises the damper, pump piston, plastic expansion joint for the piston, permanent magnet rotor, stator of the linear permanent magnet motor and cylindrical housing. The upper part of the housing is linked to the diaphragm, the diaphragm cavity is divided into two chambers each fitted with an intake ball valve and a discharge ball valve, respectively; the internal cavity of the housing is filled with oil being a hydraulic fluid of the piston pump which has proper lubricating properties and provides proper sealing from the diaphragm to the expansion joint; the spring-loaded flexible assembly, piston pump, damper, rotor of the linear permanent magnet motor, stator of the linear permanent magnet motor and elastic expansion joints are mounted below the diaphragm.

The drawback of this engineering concept is a relatively poor reliability of the diaphragm and damper which is a compensator of the volume within the downhole linear motor during its operation and provides no impact protection in the extreme upper and lower points of the piston.

A reciprocating downhole pump with the gas separator located at its end (US20060002808 A1) has been proposed. The gas separator forms a cavity. The cavity has orifices for fluid passage during reciprocation of the pump plunger. The orifices are sized so as the fluid enters the pump intake while the gas is separated from the fluid in the formed cavity.

The drawback of this engineering concept is increased dimensions and weight of the unit due to external gas separator since the reciprocating downhole pump and the gas separator form two separate units.

A linear motor driven oilfield pump (US20080264625 A1) has been proposed. The linear motor moves the crankshaft or hydraulic gear for driving the pump plunger.

The drawback of this engineering concept is a poor bending resistance of the plunger since the plunger housing diameter is greater than that of the plunger and provides no plunger bending resistance.

It has previously been proposed to use a downhole pumping unit (U.S. Pat. No. 5,960,875 A) comprising an electric pump which includes the linear motor consisting of a stator (fixed part) and a mover (moving part) which can be moved under the effect of the electromagnetic field generated by the stator, a pump piston is moved inside the stator by the linear motor and characterized in that the motor mover and the piston are located inside the electric pump stator and form a single moving component of the linear motor.

The drawback of this unit is a relatively low power performance, great power losses due to large magnetic gap between magnetic sections of the mover and stator. This unit has a relatively low power since the mimetic sections of the mover are made of soft magnetic materials to provide for mover removal. The mounting of additional sensors such as intake pressure and temperature sensors and motor temperature sensor; requires the supplementary communication lines of the ground-based unit.

The most technically similar concept to the proposed one is a unit (RU 2521530, C1) comprising a displacement pump and a downhole linear motor which includes the fixed part (stator) with the winding, and the moving pan inside (mover) designed so as to allow the mover to reciprocate with regard to stator, the motor cavity is vented, the motor housing as linked to the pump case, the mover is linked to the moving part of the pump through the rod, the stator has the cylindrical and end sealing elements for the stator; the motor cavity is vented through filter and linked with the pump cavity through the packing between the rod and housing, the motor stator has longitudinal through conduits between the external face of the winding and inner face of the motor housing which connect the cavities on either end sides of the stator.

This unit is characterized in that it may be equipped with the supplementary rod identical to the first one arranged on the other side of the mover and vented through additional packing in a housing, the filter is designed as a fine filter, the tubular members made of high thermal conductivity material may be arranged in longitudinal through conduits with the ends of tubular members tightly connected to the end packing elements of the stator.

The most similar engineering concept has a relatively poor reliability and low power performance.

The object of the present invention is to increase the reliability and improve the power performance of the unit by overcoming the above mentioned drawback of the previous engineering concepts.

SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION

The subject of the present invention is an oil-well pumping unit comprising a downhole part including a fully integrated plunger pump and gravity gas separator, downhole linear motor, downhole telemetry unit fitted with stratum fluid temperature and pressure sensors, vibration sensor, drift log or inclinometer and the ground-based part consisting of the control unit designed as a three-phase high-frequency inverting controller, output transformer connected with the downhole linear motor via insulated three-wire cable.

BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF DRAWINGS

FIG. 1. Oil-well Pumping Unit

FIG. 2. Plunger Pump during (a) Upstroke and (b) Downstroke

FIG. 3. Downhole Linear Motor

FIG. 4. Magnets, Concentrators, Magnetic Field Lines

FIG. 5. Grease and Hard Lubricants

FIG. 6. Non-Return Valve, Cable Glands and Sensors

FIG. 7. Oil-well Pumping Unit. Electric Circuit Diagram

DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENT

The other specifications and advantages of the present invention will be more evident based on the following explanatory description combined with the attached drawings.

The oil-well pumping unit comprises the plunger pump (2, FIG. 2) fitted with discharge valves (3, FIG. 2) with. the non-return valve skid (4, FIG. 2) connected to the pump discharge being a coupling (5, FIG. 2) for fastening of the oil-well pumping unit to the flow tubing (6) mounted in a single housing (1) which is a gravity gas separator. The pump is fitted with die filter (7, FIG. 2) for purifying the incoming fluid, barrel (8, FIG. 2) and plunger (9, FIG. 2, additional plunger (48, FIG. 2), which is mounted in the additional cylinder cavity (49, FIG. 2).

The oil-well pumping unit also comprises the downhole linear motor (10, FIG. 1) mounted below the plunger pump (2, FIG. 2) including the fixed part designed as a stator (11, FIG. 3) with the three-phase winding as a double-row sectional coils (12, FIG. 3) and laminated iron cores (13, FIG. 3), stator bore (14, FIG. 3) as a single-part internally honed non-magnetic pipe and a moving part inside the stator bore designed as a slider (15, FIG. 3) consisting of a non-magnetic axle (16, FIG. 3) with the magnets (17, FIG. 3) and concentrators (18, FIG. 3) directing the magnetic lines of magnets radially as shown in FIG. 4, non-magnetic bushes of the slider (19, FIG. 3) with the strength less than that of the non-magnetic pipe designed for reciprocation with respect to stator which is filled with the high-dielectric fluid, the stator (11, FIG. 3) is vented through the hydroprotection cavity (20, FIG. 3) and diaphragm (21, FIG. 3). Temperature sensors (22, FIG. 3) are fitted in coils (12, FIG. 3). The stator is fitted with the dump valve (23, FIG. 3) to discharge dielectric fluid to the atmosphere. The motor cavity is vented through filter (24, FIG. 3) and packings (25, FIG. 3), packings at the top and bottom of the motor are fitted on a single-piece slide bush (26, FIG. 3), the slider-stator cavity is filled with the grease (27, FIG. 5) and hard (28, FIG. 5) lubricants. The slider (15, FIG. 3) is rigidly attached to the moving part of the plunger pump through the extension bar (29, FIG. 2) as a metallic rod with bores for transferred fluid overflow.

The oil-well pumping unit also comprises the slider upstroke damper (30, FIG. 2) mounted below the plunger pump (2, FIG. 2) and slider downstroke damper (31, FIG. 3) mounted between the downhole linear motor (10, FIG. 3) and its base (32, FIG. 3).

The oil-well pumping unit also comprises telemetry system, downhole telemetry unit (33, FIG. 3) mounted below the base (32, FIG. 3) connected to the stator cavity with the small-section ducts through cable glands (34, FIG. 6) with the buried wires of temperature sensors (22, FIG. 3), oil pressure sensors inside the motor (35, FIG. 6), neutral wires (36, FIG. 7) of windings of the downhole linear motor (10, FIG. 3). The downhole telemetry unit (33, FIG. 3) is fitted with the filling valve (37, FIG. 6) and stratum fluid temperature (38, FIG. 6) and pressure sensors (39, FIG. 6), vibration sensor (40, FIG. 6), drift log or inclinometer (41, FIG. 6), measurement unit (42, FIG. 6) which is connected to all these sensors and neutral wire of the downhole linear motor windings. The downhole motor is fed from the ground-based control unit (44, FIG. 7) through cable line as an insulated three-wire cable (43, FIG. 7) the ground-based control unit comprises the telemetry control unit, and is a inverting rectifier, has the measuring channel, through the output transformer (45, FIG. 7) providing for increased voltage. The downhole and ground-based units are connected through the neutral wire of windings (36, FIG. 7) of the downhole linear motor and neutral wire (46, FIG. 7) of the output transformer secondary winding. The ground-based control unit (44, FIG. 7) is fed with three-phase AC voltage.

The operating principle of the oil-well pumping unit is as follows.

The ground-based control unit (44, FIG. 7) is fed with three-phase AC voltage. The ground-based control unit (44, FIG. 7) converts the power signal and supplies it to the downhole linear motor (10, FIG. 7) through the output transformer (45, FIG. 7) and cable line (43, FIG. 7).

The power signal causes the current to flow through sectional coils (12, FIG. 3) and this current generates the traveling magnetic field. The traveling magnetic field causes the slider (15, FIG. 3) to smoothly reciprocate up and down for the prescribed displacement The slider (15, FIG. 3) is rigidly connected to the pump plunger using extension bar (29, FIG. 2) and additional plunger (48, FIG. 2), and the stator (11, FIG. 3) is rigidly connected to the housing (1, FIG. 2) of the plunger pump (2, FIG. 2).

During the downstroke, the discharge valve (3, FIG. 2) is opened and non-return valves (4, FIG. 2) are dosed, the cavity of the barrel (8, FIG. 2) is filled with the transferred fluid due to underpressure. During the upstroke, the discharge valve (3, FIG. 2) is closed, the downhole linear motor (10, FIG. 3) acts to pressurize the fluid within the barrel (8, FIG. 2) and non-return valves (4, FIG. 2) are opened, the volume of fluid filled during the downstroke is pushed into the flow tubing (47, FIG. 1) and subsequently transferred to the surface as the flow tubing is being filled.

The filter (7, FIG. 2) of the plunger pump may be designed with different degrees of purification of the transferred fluid in order to increase the pump life in case of high concentration of mechanical impurities.

The filter (7, FIG. 2) of the plunger pump may be designed with different degrees of purification of the fluid entering the cavity of the downhole motor (10, FIG. 3) designed for compensation of the underpressure/pressure of the transferred fluid created during motion of the slider (15, FIG. 3).

The transferred fluid is drawn into plunger pump (2, FIG. 2) through the housing (1, FIG. 2) which is a gravity gas separator.

The ground-based control unit (44, FIG. 1) receives the oil-well fluid pressure and temperature parameters from the downhole telemetry unit (33, FIG. 1) to control the inflow of the transferred fluid and changes the operating mode of the downhole linear motor to maintain this production rate.

The ground-based control unit (44, FIG. 1) receives the temperatures of the downhole linear motor (10, FIG. 1) and oil-well fluid from the downhole telemetry unit (33, FIG. 1) to control operating temperature of the downhole part and changes the operating mode of the downhole motor to maintain its safe operating temperatures.

The ground-based control unit (44, FIG. 1) determines the position of the slider (15) and controls the operation of the downhole linear motor (10, FIG. 1) according to the cyclogram: the upstroke means the rated power consumption, the downstroke means the minimum power consumption.

The ground-based control unit (44, FIG. 1) receives the oil-well fluid pressure and temperature parameters from the downhole telemetry unit (33, FIG. 1) to control the inflow of the transferred fluid in the well and changes the operating mode of the downhole linear motor (10, FIG. 1) to maintain this production rate.

The ground-based control unit (44, FIG. 1) measures the EFM generated on the stator windings of the linear motor (10, FIG. 1) during motion of the slider (15, FIG. 1) and determines the position of the slider (15, FIG. 1).

The downhole motor has an increased life thanks to grease (27, FIG. 5) and hard (28, FIG. 5) lubricants and packing (25, FIG. 3).

The description of a preferred embodiment of the invention, has been presented for purposes of illustration and description. It is not intended to be exhaustive or to limit the invention to the precise forms disclosed. Obviously, many modifications and variations will be apparent to practitioners skilled in this art. It is intended that the scope of the invention be defined by the following claims and their equivalents. 

What is claimed is:
 1. An oil well pumping unit, comprising; a downhole part which includes a fully integrated plunger pump fitted with discharge valves and a filter cleaning oil fluid and a gravity gas separator with a non-return valve skid above fitted with a coupling for fastening of the oil-well pumping unit to a flow tubing, a downhole linear motor mourned below the plunger pump including a fixed part as a stator with a three-phase winding and fitted temperature sensors, a stator bore houses a moving pan as a slider designed for reciprocating with regard to the stator, a stator cavity is filled with a dielectric fluid, a slider cavity is filled with grease and hard lubricants, the slider is rigidly connected to an extension bar, characterized in that it has a slider upstroke damper mounted below the plunger pump with discharge valves, and a slider downstroke damper mounted at a motor base bottom, a telemetry system below the linear motor.
 2. The oil-well pumping unit of claim 1, wherein the telemetry system below the linear motor includes at least one oil-well fluid temperature sensor, a pressure sensor, a vibration sensor, inclinometer, a measurement unit connected to the at least one temperature, sensor and mounted within the linear motor and connected to a ground-based control unit though a neutral wire of a star-connected windings of the linear motor.
 3. The oil-well pumping unit of claim 2, wherein the ground-based control unit is designed as a three-phase high-frequency inverting controller and output transformer and connected to the downhole linear motor through an insulated three-wire cable.
 4. The oil-well pumping unit of claim 3, characterized in that a ground-based control unit comprises a channel for measuring back EMF generated in stator windings of the downhole linear motor during slider motion, determines a slider position and designed to provide for reverse motion when the slider reaches an extreme upper and lower point.
 5. The oil-well pumping unit of claim 2, characterized in that the ground-based control unit is connected to the downhole telemetry unit of the oil-well pumping unit through the neutral wire of the downhole linear motor windings, insulated three-wire cable and neural wire of the output transformer secondary winding.
 6. The oil-well pumping unit of claim 1, wherein characterized in that a connecting plunger cylinder that is part of the linear motor and provides for stability of the slider of the downhole linear motor and plunger of the plunger pump.
 7. The oil-well pumping unit of claim 1, characterized in that a gravity gas separator is structurally designed as a housing of the plunger pump.
 8. The oil-well pumping unit of claim 1, characterized in that a slider upstroke and downstroke damper is a structural part of the downhole motor and plunger pump, and provides protection of the plunger pump plunger and slider of the downhole linear motor.
 9. The oil-well pumping unit of claim 1, characterized in that a stator bore is made with a single-piece internally honed guide non-magnetic pipe and an interacting part of the slider, non-magnetic slider bushes, is designed as a mating part from a non-magnetic material of a lesser hardness.
 10. The oil-well pumping unit of claim 1, characterized in that the slider consists of magnets and concentrators of magnetic field fixed on a non-magnetic axle which provide concentration and directivity of magnetic flux.
 11. The oil-well pumping unit of claim 1, characterized in that three-phase stator windings are designed as double-row sectional coils and cores are made of laminated iron.
 12. The oil-well pumping unit of claim 1, characterized in that, a slider output from a top and bottom of the stator is designed as a single-piece slide bush with packing, and the slider has a cavity that is filled with grease and hard lubricants.
 13. The oil-well pumping unit of claim 1, characterized in that a cavity of the downhole linear motor stator is tight and filled with a high-dielectric fluid, and has a small section channel interconnecting an inner cavity of the stator with a cavity of the telemetry system and hydroprotection cavity with a vented diaphragm.
 14. A method of pumping well fluid in a subterranean location, comprising: a. a downhole part of a pumping unit is fitted into a well bore, a plunger pump through its plunger reciprocation transmitted by a downhole linear motor slider through an extension bar draws oil-well fluid from the well bore through an at least one discharge valve and pushes the oil-well fluid to a flow tubing through an at least one non-return valve by means of a gravity gas separator; b. a ground-based control unit provides the downhole linear motor with three-phase AC power to generate a traveling magnetic field in a stator and provide for smooth reciprocating motion of the downhole linear motor slider; c. the plunger moves up—power stroke, during an upstroke, the oil-well fluid is pushed inside the pump barrel to the flow tubing through the at least one non-return valve; d. when the plunger moves down during a downstroke, the oil-well fluid is drawn from the well bore through the at least one discharge valve at a top of the pump.
 15. The oil-well fluid lifting system and method of claim 14, wherein the stage (a) is characterized in that the oil-well fluid is drawn from the well bore through the gravity gas separator.
 16. The oil-well fluid lifting system and method of claim 14, wherein the stage (b) is characterized in that the ground-based control unit provides the downhole linear motor with the three-phase AC power through an insulated three-wire cable to generate the traveling magnetic field in the stator in order to provide the smooth motion of the slider.
 17. The oil-well fluid lifting system and method of claim 14, wherein the stage (c) is characterized in that when the plunger moves up during the upstroke, the oil-well fluid is pushed inside the pump barrel to the flow tubing through the at least one non-return valve.
 18. The oil-well fluid lifting system and method of claim 14, wherein the stage (d) is characterized in that when the plunger moves down during the downstroke, the oil-well fluid is drawn from the well bore through the at least one discharge valve at the pump top.
 19. A power consumption optimization system and method, comprising the following stages: a. a ground-based control unit receiving an oil-well fluid pressure and temperature parameters from a downhole telemetry unit to control an inflow of a transferred fluid in a well and changes an operating mode of a downhole linear motor to maintain a production rate; b. the ground-based control unit receives the temperature parameters of the downhole linear motor and the oil-well fluid from the downhole telemetry unit to control operating temperature of a downhole part and changes the operating mode of the downhole linear motor to maintain safe operating temperatures; c. the ground-based control unit determining a position of a slider and controlling, the operation of the downhoIe linear motor according to a cyclogram: an upstroke means a rated power consumption, and a downstroke means a minimum power consumption.
 20. The power consumption optimization system and method of claim 19, wherein the stage (a) is characterized in that the ground-based control unit receives the oil-well fluid pressure and temperature parameters from the downhole telemetry unit to control the inflow of the transferred fluid in the well and changes the operating mode of the downhole linear motor to maintain the production rate.
 21. The power consumption optimization system and method of claim 19, wherein the stage (c) is characterized in that the around based control unit measures a back EMF generated in a stator windings of the downhole linear motor during slider motion and determines the slider position.
 22. The power consumption optimization system and method of claim 19, wherein the stage (c) is characterized in that the ground-based control unit controls the operation of the downhole linear motor according to the cyclogram: the upstroke means the rated power consumption, the downstroke means the minimum power consumption. 